Trina RoacheAPTN Investigates
Edward Cornwallis is honoured as the founder of Halifax. A British military leader who issued bounties on Mi’kmaw scalps, his statue in a city park named in his honour has been at the centre of division and debate.

For years, the Mi’kmaq have fought to have his monument removed. It happened at the end of January — a celebratory moment for the Mi’kmaq.

“We’re in a time now of truth and reconciliation, and peace and friendship,” said Mi’kmaw activist Rebecca Moore, watching crews work to lift the statue from its pedestal.

“This is it being lived out, right now in this moment,” said Moore. “And I’m really, really happy and proud to be here and to be able to witness this.”

Overhead, an eagle circled as a crane lifted the statue from its granite base.

“For that eagle to come and fly right over us, just right the same moment as Cornwallis just got removed from his pedestal was just, it was very affirming to me,” said Moore.

This was a moment three decades in the making and the focus of an APTN Investigatesepisode, History Decolonized.

It started with Mi’kmaw Elder Dan Paul, who published “We Were Not the Savages” in 1993. Paul applied an Indigenous lens to the history of the Nova Scotia and it painted a vastly different picture.

“In his correspondence with the Lords of Trade in London, [Cornwallis] made it clear that it would be best to root the Mi’kmaq out of the peninsula of Nova Scotia for all time and forever,” said Paul.

“What kind of a man is that and why do we have a statue of him in the park?” asked Moore, just weeks before a sudden turn of events led to the statue’s removal.

It’s a question Halifax city council has wrestled with for years. And a question that sparks fierce debate, one echoed across the continent.

Last May, a speech by the Mayor of New Orleans on why the confederate monuments were being removed went viral.

“There is a difference, you see, between remembrance of history and the reverence of it,” said Mitch Landrieu.

In the United States, as monuments came down in 2017, racism ramped up.

In Charlottesville, Va., white supremacists protested the removal of Robert E. Lee’s statue. Counter rallies were held and violent clashes followed. It turned deadly after a white nationalist drove his car into a crowd of protesters, killing a 32-year-old woman.

Canada is hardly immune to the racist backlash when colonial history is questioned.

“We’re seeing this emergence of it in much bolder ways,” said El Jones, a professor, poet and activist in Halifax. “I’ve certainly experienced it myself, very much an increase in the intensity of harassment. So people who love me are like, don’t walk home alone.”

Jones said it intensifies around the topic of Cornwallis.

In council meetings over the past year, Halifax councillors have referenced the racist emails they’ve received on the topic of Cornwallis.

And whether it’s Cornwallis or one of the confederate monuments, the rhetoric often includes the line, “you can’t erase history.”

“Where’s our history, if you can’t erase history?” said Moore. “Only settler people, only the colonist can erase history? Because this land has a whole pre-colonial history, where’s our pre-colonial history? Nowhere. It’s like they think that the world started when they landed here. And it didn’t.”

“I always call it white amnesia,” said Jones. “Like, white people don’t have to reckon with history and they have the privilege to forget it.”

Halifax mayor Mike Savage said it’s important the city grapple with an uncomfortable history.

“This is a city like many cities that has been a victim of systemic racism. Not just against First Nations, but against African Nova Scotians as well,” said Savage. “And we can’t deny the history. We have to accept the history and learn from it.”

Before the statue came down, Savage called it an “impediment to progress.”

City council had struck a committee to explore issues around the commemoration of Cornwallis. Savage hoped it would be an avenue to education.

But after months of no action, the Mi’kmaw chiefs lost patience and pulled out and demanded the statue be removed immediately.

The grassroots moved quickly to plan a rally called “Removing Cornwallis.” City staff, fearing a potential conflict, recommended to council that the statue be taken down and put into storage.

Within days, the debate was back before council who voted overwhelmingly in support of removing Cornwallis.

“It’s down and it allows us to have that conversation we need to have on true reconciliation,” said Savage.

The Mi’kmaq held a rally at Cornwallis Park, standing where the statue had stood just days before.

"Out of respect for the Indigenous peoples of Manitoba, we at the Winnipeg School Division recognize the schools we attend reside on Treaty 1 land known as First Nations Territory as well as the Homeland of the Metis Nation".